MultiMarkdown 3.0b1 released!

MultiMarkdown 3.0 has moved to beta. Changes in this version primarily consist
of bug fixes (mostly bugs pointed out by Jonathan Coulombe — Thanks!). The
more interesting changes are those related to XSLT.

Using MMD 3, there are two general approaches to generating LaTeX output. The
first approach is using the multimarkdown -t latex command line approach.
The multimarkdown binary converts the source text file directly into LaTeX
output. This approach is the easiest and fastest. It also doesn’t require any
additional configuration once you’ve installed the binary.

The second approach is similar to the mechanism used in MMD 2. Basically, the
multimarkdown binary is used to convert the source text file into XHTML.
Then, xsltproc is used to convert the XHTML file into LaTeX. To help
simplify this, there is a script available in the [MMD-Support] package called
mmd2xslt.pl.

IMPORTANT: This script is not yet “official.” This means, if you can
figure out how to use it, great. If not, then wait for it to be officially
supported. It’s been available for a while for the curious, but I would like
to get a bit more testing from more advanced users who are comfortable working
with this now.

In this release, I have worked to bring these two approaches for creating
LaTeX into sync. Ideally, whether one uses multimarkdown -t latex or
mmd2xslt.pl, the generated LaTeX output should be the same.